Australia PM accuses over 'misogyny'

Julia Gillard, Australia's first female prime minister, has accused opposition leader Tony Abbott of sexism and hypocrisy after he forced a vote to remove House Speaker Peter Slipper, who later resigned.

Ms Gillard's Labor government, which appointed Mr Slipper last year to shore up its numbers in parliament, won a vote to block Mr Abbott's motion hours before the speaker quit, saying he didn't want to damage the House's reputation.

Mr Abbott said Mr Slipper was unfit for the role after allegedly sending text messages that contained crude comments about women.

"I will not be lectured about sexism and misogyny by this man," Ms Gillard told parliament, pointing at Mr Abbott. "The leader of the opposition says that people who hold sexist views and who are misogynist are not appropriate for high office.

"Well I hope the leader of the opposition has got a piece of paper and he is writing out his resignation." Mr Abbott, whose Liberal-National coalition is leading in polls before elections due next year, has faced claims from Labor ministers that he has a problem dealing with powerful women.

He began a media blitz defending his credibility last week with the help of his wife Margie. Ms Gillard has been confronted by protesters bearing placards reading 'Ditch the Witch' since becoming prime minister in June 2010, and has previously attacked sexism in Australian politics.

Yesterday, she accused Mr Abbott of "repulsive double standards when it comes to misogyny" and said she'd been offended by "cat-calling" to her in the House of Representatives.

Opposition Stance Opposition lawmakers including Nationals leader Warren Truss said the government is trying to undermine Mr Abbott to deflect attention from a slowing economy and the introduction of new taxes. Ms Gillard is the first Australian prime minister who isn't married. She has no children and lives in the capital Canberra with her partner, hairdresser Tim Mathieson.

In August, she said there were sexist overtones to allegations she was guilty of misconduct at a law firm she worked at in the 1990s. Australia has a "blokey" culture, and Ms Gillard plans to boost female representation across government boards, she said in an interview in September 2011.

While retaining the title of speaker, Mr Slipper hadn't served in the role since April, when he stepped aside after a former employee issued a civil claim accusing him of making unwanted sexual advances. He is fighting the civil action.

Mr Slipper (62), held the seat of Fisher in Queensland, which he won in 1993, for the Liberal Party until November, when he resigned from the party to become an independent and was named speaker.

“The importance and the role of the House of Representatives in Australia is far more important than my own future or my own continuation as speaker," Mr Slipper said in an address to parliament yesterday. He said he will remain an independent lawmaker and was confident he would be vindicated.

Anna Burke, a Labor lawmaker, was elected by the House to replace Mr Slipper as speaker. The resignation isn't expected to negate the minority government's ability to push legislation through parliament, Leader of the House Anthony Albanese, told Australian Broadcasting Corp in an interview.

Mr Abbott yesterday claimed Labor should have "died of shame" for its performance in governing. His words echoed those of Alan Jones, a critic of Ms Gillard, after the Sydney-based disc jockey claimed at a Liberal Party fundraiser that the prime minister's father, who passed away last month, had "died of shame".

Mr Abbott has declined to rule out appearing on Jones's radio show, which has suspended all advertising after companies withdrew their support.

"The government is not dying of shame," Ms Gillard said yesterday. "My father did not die of shame. What the leader of the opposition should be ashamed of is his performance in this parliament and the sexism he brings with it."

The opposition leader last month denied allegations that he physically intimidated a female political opponent during Sydney University elections in 1977.

The latest analysis of Newspoll surveys, published in The Australian on October 5th, suggested 29 per cent of female voters are satisfied with Abbott, compared with 34 per cent of men.

"I won't stand by and let others claim that the man I love, and the father my children adore, has some agenda against women," Margie Abbott said in a News Ltd.

interview published on October 5th.

Support for Ms Gillard's governing Labor Party has fallen from an 18-month high, as the prime minister struggles to gain traction with voters before elections due next year.

Labor's primary vote dropped 3 percentage points to 33 per cent, while Tony Abbott's Liberal-National coalition climbed 4 points to 45 per cent, according to a Newspoll survey published in the Australian newspaper yesterday.

Taking preference votes into account, Labor trailed the coalition by 8 points after pulling level in the previous survey.

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